review 1: This was amazing. It turns several D&D and fantasy tropes on their side while having fun the whole while. The Rat Queens are one of many mercenary guilds in the city. Betty, Hannah, Violet, and Dee represent a range of perspectives and attitudes, but don't get between them - t...

review 1: This book is an intersting take on the idea of a detective story. How exactly does one become a detective, if for instance there is no communication in a community, and the community itself is largely an antagonistic purgatory? The art work is interesting, and reminiscent of the ...

review 1: This is an incredibly awesome re-imagining of Peter Pan and crew as orphans in occupied France. As I may have said previously in these reviews, I am a literal reader, so I sometimes have difficulty when the action in a frame is unclear. And I have worse difficulty when the acti...

review 1: I will admit that I was rather skeptical about reading graphic novels or comics. I was under the assumption that they were geared mostly for teenage males. But, then I discovered Rat Queens and I have never been so happy to be proven incorrect. Seriously. The story follows a uniq...

review 1: Peter Panzerfaust is a retelling of JM Barrie’s Peter Pan set in Nazi-occupied France in 1940 – and it’s really good!Told from the perspective of one of the orphans Peter liberates in the opening chapter, who’s now an elderly man, The Great Escape follows Peter and the boys as th...